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j . v 4 ” t " oa ea ee Fa Le Se a FTES COSMOU MSs A ee ett et ee | | PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE! Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class | Matter. EDITORIAL REVIEW Comments reproduced in this column may or may not express the opinion of The Tribune, They are presented here ir order that ovr readers may have both sides of important issues which are being discussed in the press of the day, Editor | GEORGE D. MANN Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO - - -DETROIT cs : ee Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg.| WISE RECOMMENDATIONS ‘ PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH | In making his report, Attorney NEW YORK - - Bs 5 Fifth Ave. Bldg. |General Johnson has included a) ‘number of recommendations which MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | merit the attention of the state “The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or [esislature. Among other things, républication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other-"° a ee ae peciae Bg wise credited in this paper and also the local news published | 8°ne"a! S20ul’ be \ herein. i member of various boards, a ae k . aati, A : . don board excepted, in order that }, All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are j¢ may be able to devote himself algo reserved. : | the legal work of nis depart: Wie 5 ment, and to the preparation ©! MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION | legal’ opinions for the various de- | zt artments and boards created to! | SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE | carry ‘on the business of the atate. | Daily by carrier, per year........... .....$7.20| In the past we have followed | Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck)... Bil T DY | the unwise practice of loading up Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck).... 5.00' the otthes ot ae aoe Beueral | Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota............... 6.00) character. ‘The idea has seemed ‘to be that inasmuch as each board THE sneer Seep on SPAPER lor commission, which has been! stablishe ‘created would need legal advice % from time to time, the attorney | GOOD WORK GOES GN | seaeral shield be sete ae i: There are many citizens who know of the remarkable’ that he might be on the job when-| work of the Red Cross during the war who still think, of it| ever his legal opinion is required. merely as a war-time organization. They forget, perhaps, the | The tendency nag ean to mae she | splendid work of the Red Cross in many years preceding the tn’, than legal, 2s' the “official war, of their effective rendition of aid to victims of earth-' has peen expected not only to do, quake disaster in Italy, famine in China or pestilence inthe legal work of the board or, some ofher=quarters. of the globe. It was only because the! commission,” but ie berticipate. it RedsGrosshad a -remarkableworganization before the war |fl beh ial part eae ahaa that it was able to achieve so much during the war. | sarily been a dissipation of enorey | ¥ The Red Cross has continued to function as- effectively |and a vast amount of confusion in’ ag ever since the war, and has proved of inestimable value ‘te, Work of the state's legal de-’ Srey ty bi 5 |partment. The attorney general inzsolving problems of the readjustment period. The work | was. intended to be the legal repre- | of, the last several months of the Burleigh ‘County organiza-| sentative and legal adviser of the | tion of the Red Cross ig quite in keeping with the high stand-| state. We have drifted away from | ard of the organizatigu,. It has rendered invaluable aid to | ‘®t. amd the recommendation of; ES fi acs «.|Mr. Johnson is that we return to! former service men “to citizens generally through its| the original coriception of the of- | sdgial service work. The organization is to be congratulated | fice. To do that will insure more | upon the report of the national officers showing the Bur-| effective service. It will enable the leigh county body had done more work for service men than attorney general himself to devote aity other Red Cross organization in the state and ranks high fun, entgerieg; to, the. dudes itor, te among the Red Cross units of the nation. : performance of which his office; MYSTERIOUS FORCE Wag created, and it will result inj ;the appointment in his stead on ae moceesery Doris ang commiseon © Up north, in Canada’s cold lakes, the salmon trout are devote their « entire time to adminis. spawning. Observe the cunning of mysterious Mother! trative work. The state will get Nature: ; ee ther pa reer ete = A typical salmon trout lake is Portage Lake, mile and a| grow out of experience with bank half long, half a mile wide, 350 feet deep. It’s the crater of | scandals of recent notoriety. It is ant extinct voleano. urged that laws for. the protection _gSalmon trout are deep-water fish, usually caught by troll-' of y,0@pouiars against banking: - ‘ng with a copper line at least 100 feet down. Water at that! the history of the Scandinavian’ depth is as cold as the breath of some European diplomats. 4 Salmon eggs, of course, would not hatch in ice water. So, % get the salmon nearer the surface and make them spawn 1* warmer shallow waters, nature about this time of year saws “trout ice” or barnacles along their sides. These barnacles are yellow, about a half inch long, shaped > a_man with the two fists glued to the.salmon’s side. To serape off these:barnacles, thé salmon swims up dn the sa 1s nee it can ryb against gravel. :As it rubs, the eggs laid. 3 with it, some of which methods have been merely loose and. negii- honest, but against which the laws ag they stand do not. provide ade- practicés North Dakota depositors | have lost hundreds of thousands are so vague that there is really’ no proper recourse. The recommendations of the at- torney general on these matters are Clearly in the interest of bet- | ter government and safer banking. | They involve no. political element except where there exists the de- {sire to use political methods for dishonest purposes. It is to be | hoped that they will be considered on ‘their merits—Grand Forks Herald, i t PASSING OF THE OLD WEST : tere ‘i The oid West is no more. | Old Mother Nature, who stages the salmon spawning, is|!ives omly in history, in popular’ fen i 2aS | traditi i pact cunning in bet regulation of every other form of life, | ans Warten Spal able ,; Sometimes men individually or by groups or by nations exert themselves almost to exhaustion to accomplish a cer- tain thing, and fail completely. at bewilders them. It siiould not, for the failure merely indicates that the goal was | ngt in nature’s scheme of things. * Most evils result from_restricting natural processes. We : are caanot cheat nature. Life would run more smoothly if men |° ‘he Texas cattle kings recently’) 74 i 2 a . es | Passed away. In his day, Samuel , 7!" ever learned their lesson instead of trying, over and over|Burk Bennett had been wagon | &rew aginst, 7 aie the ends that nature clearly informs | css, cowboy, ranch hand, fore- us"she will-not stand for. man and, finally, owner of broad # This applies to personal acts, to economics, to politics and |2¢Tes and large herds. This was to’diplomacy. a in the day before oil was found in ae EVE _ A very simple plan, this, for making salmon trout spawn “he warmer waters of shallows. \ P After the eggs are laid, mother salmon returns to deep cr; Pa remains behind, near the eggs. Nature in some .’ ewn way mekes him irritable. He attacks every fish #2‘ comes near. “, By satisfying his desire to fight, he protects the eggs until wv hitch. ,, This arrangement goes on, year after year, automatically, %e the rising and setting of the sun. At ticularly in the vast area in that from empire-state, Texas, which wise- be available for agriculture. Texas. The old Chisholm trafl, over which cattle were driven from the Texas ranges to the railroad in | Kansas, disappeared long before Burnett had found his other inter- Ri ¢ UNLUCKY # This month has a Friday the 13th. Few weddings on that d Journeys will be postponed. Many hard-headed busi- nggs men, otherwise not superstitious, will withhold import-|ests more vital and more profit- ant deals until Saturday the 14th. A long way to go yet, to jable. The open range now is farm drive superstition out of man’s brain [Jend. , The Horse; Heaven: ‘country Uncertain, how the dread of Friday the 18th started. | raising “of. barnes ope ane Mghammedans believe that Adam was created on Friday, |“two-gun man” and his stern foe, ach makes the day logically the beginning of all human | ‘he vigilante, have gone the way rouble. ; of the old West. The law, thi il- The wise will keep eyes open Friday the 13th, knowing | T?a. ‘he plow and Increasing pon. Hee wath most people timid—it is the best day for oppor-/ things. * Orga upities. i ceed will All this has occurred within the | held |life-time of the ‘pioneer who re- cently passed away in Texas, He ;9aw the old West and the new. SLOW 5 COUNTESS OF ESTHON institutions in political association ‘international thief. QUIN’ ared countess cai geut, while others have been dis- JAMES DARRAGH used the to the disreputable ‘camp. jin -the: Adirondacks owned by. é quate protection. Because of these. MIKE CLINCH, who has: stolen the! He~ bowed, put on his. hat, 0 sFlaming:Jewel ‘from ft" inder the name of dollars, and in some cases the laws HAL SmitH, } \Clineh’s Dump, where Clinch’s beautiful step-daughter. blinded her. cattle-raising was king, lingered of St ¥5 longest in the Southwest and par- trees appearing level with the rocks Then she turned, acres of an earlier dubbed a desert looked at the man who had seated and predicted never could or would himself beside her. | He wore a white mask over a de- One of the last, if not the last, leate smoothly shaven face. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE y BEGIN HERE TODAY ROBERT That priceless gem, the Flaming; Then the masked man ‘took the American bank of Fargo and other Jewel, had first been aati the by ‘the TANA. . Love of the now beg- gem Quintana. - y Darragh Works he: meet STRAYER, the one “good in- fluence in the crime-stained career (2™¢ Slowly stood up of Clinch, When Quintana’and his ‘about her at the rocky pulpit so gang arrive to reagin the jewel, | familiar. . Clinch seeks to conceal it by giv- 4 ing it to Eve and telling her to tana had gone that way. His, men hide it in the “hooteh-cache.” Quin- no doubt guarded it. tana and his gang capture Eve and lead her camp, blindfolded to the CHAPTER III | Somebody had halted beside Eve. After a pause she was. aware of nimble fingers busy with the band- It age over her eyes, first, when freed, the light By degrees she was to distinguish the rocky crest ar Peak, with the tops of tall depths below. slowly, and she met his brilliant eyes be- the mask, his delicate, thin lips tense in what seemed to be a smile—or a soundless sort of laugh. “Veree happee,” he said, “to;make | the acquaintance. Pardon my un- ceremony, miss, but onlee necessitee compels, Are you, perhaps, a little rested?” “Yes,” “Ah! Then, if you permit, we pro- with affairs of moment. You be sufficiently kind to write down what I say. Yes?” He placed paper jand pencil Eve’s hand. \ hesitation she made ready to write, her mind groping wildly for the rea- son of ‘it all. “Write,” he said, with his silent laugh which’ was soundless snarl of a lynx unafraid: “To Mike Clinch, my fathaire, from his child, Eve. in Without demurring or more like the . Tam hostage, by Jose Quintana. Pay what ; you owe him and I go free. “For each day delay he sends to you one finger which will be severed ©1022 GEORGE H DORAN COMDANY = The war has been over nearly four years, but Germany | hag paid cash reparations of only about’ $400,000,000. from my right hand—” Eve’s slender fingers trembled; ‘she looked up at the masked man, ; There are few still living who have | been priviliged to witness the rise Z 2 i S ar | FOREIGN FOOTBALL | J \ys NSA 4W. CHAMBERS Yio Eve. signed. letter, got up, removed his hat. S “1 dm Quintana,” he said. “I keep «my. word, A thousand thanks and ‘japolggies, miss. I trust that, your letention may be brief and not too isagreeable. I place at your feet my humble respects.” x and alked quickly away, And. she’ saw Mhifa descend the rocks to the east- fward, where the peak slopes, i. When Quintana had disappeared ybehind the summit scrub and rocks. and looked here was only one way out. Quin- Otherwise, Sheer precipices confronted her. i The sun was, half way ‘betwee benith and horizon when she he: jomebody coming, and rose to x eins posture. Her visitor was Qui na, | He came up to her quite close, stood with glitttering eyes intent up- on her, After a moment he handed her a letter. She could scarcely unfold it, she trembled so: “Girlie, for God’s sake give that packet to Quintana and come on nome. I’m near crazy with it all. ‘What the hell’s anything worth be- side you, girlie. I don’t give a damn for nothing only you, so come on quick, Dad.” After a little while she lifted her eyes to Quintana. | EVERETT TRUE (DOCKKEEPING WORK $ US FoR IF IT ASN'T To LIVE IN USE IT AS 4 MORGUE Teer ME, HRS. TRUE, w © Doing a little arithmetic, you find that the cash indemn-|°f and the change in that vast, rich it payments thus average about $1.61 a year for each Ger-| i Sas 2. : | # Maybe Einstein can figure out how long, it will take, at} this rate, to get the bill paid in full. | # | & ; SIGNATURE = An Irish court is called on to determine whether the ex- kaiser’s autograph is worth $50. The signature in question! keep Eve trembled. ee ‘ . . i i : «p. d,” he said softly. was in an album destroyed by the burning of an insured sie a the soul is competent) gif Wrote: “It von Taree Fol house. | The ex-kaiser’s signature on the original declaration of; cost the world $140,000,000,000. | 2A few. strokes of ink certainly make a difference. How) much is your signature worth, used to its utmost. power. | CLEAN-UP Wi Hajime Hoshi of Chicago is worth $10,000,000. In 1910 weather _ starts. ha:was working on a salary of $15 a week. He borrowed $200 Lignite Coal Co. Phone 453. and started in business, making drug store supplies Spal . @Instead of establishing his own branch stores, he grub- staked others, training them to sell his wares, prgfits. Now he has his own college for educating his agents. | _ The rule seems to be, no big fortune unless you get other peaple working for you. basement with the famous stick you shall lay, the parcel wh Wilton Lignite before bad ‘tins your debt to Jose Quin-|, ¢ from the Franch’ queue, meaning a sharing the tail, as the letter O with a tail. jeffect on an imitation. j stared steadily into his brilliant eyes. peed @| “Proved iiss, if you are so ami- | A THOUGHT ij able,” he said softly. ‘| She wrote on: “—One finger for | | every day’s delay. The’ whole hand} This man began to build and was |2t the week's end. The other hand not able to finish—Luke 14:30, ; then, finger by finger. Then, alas! "Tis the’ most difficult of tasks to the Tight foot—” j empire.—Seattle Times. fc shall pay what you owe to Jose William Wordsworth. Quintana in this manner; you shail| | plaee a stick at the edge of the Star LET'S GO! 'Pond where the Star rivilet flows ae out, Upon this stick you shall tie Now is the time to fill your o white rag. At the foot of the tana, “Failing this, by tonight one finger at sunset,” The man paused: Eve waited, dumb under the surging confusion inj her brain. A sort of incredulous hor- ror benumbed her, through which 1 Ere Tra yy she still heard and perceived. Radium will make a real diamond “Be kind enough to sign it with sparkle in the dark while it has no your name,” said the man pleasant- Washburn The name of the letter Q comes ily. AND @© DONE 5 ‘wyrs eu THAT'S JUST ExactTcy (F ‘foe Go tn THERS “So,” he said quietly, “you are the little she-fox that has learned tricks already.” “What do you. mean?” “Where is that packet?” - “I haven’t it.” “Where is it?” She shook her head slightly. “You had a packet,” he insisted fiercely. “Look here! Regard!” and he spread out a penciled sheet in Clinch’s hand: “Jose Quintana: with her. “You win. let my girl go. She’s got that stuff “Mike Clinch.” “Well,” said Quintana, a thin, stirdent edge to his tone. “My father is mistaken. I haven't any packet.” The man’s visage behind his mas flushed darkly, Without warning or ceremony he caught Eve by the throat, and tore open her shirt. ‘hen, hissing and cursing and pant- ing with his own violence, he searched her brutally mercy—flung her down and tore off her spiral puttees and even her shocs| and stockings, now apparently be- side himself with fury, puffing, gasp- ing, always with a fierce, nasal sort of whining undertone like an animal | worrying its kill. “Cowardly beast!” she panted, fighting him with all her strength-- “filthy, cowardly breast!—” strik- ing at him, wrenching his grasp away, snatching at the disordered clothing half stripped from her. His hunting knife fell clattering and she fought to get it, but he struck her with his open hand, knocking her down at his feet, and stood glaring at her with every tooth bared. “So,” he cried. “I give you ten minutes, make up your mind, tell me what you do with that packet.” He wiped the blood from his face where she had struck him. “You don’t ‘know Jose Quintana, No! You shall make his acquain- tance, Yes!” ; Eve got up on naked feet, quiver- ing from head to foot, striving to BY CONDO Now, DON'T Go WN THE CIVING Room (AND GITTER IT ALC VP WITH THAT HAT A LIVING. ROOM} | | | Take your damn junk and} and without | | button the gray shirt to her throav. | “Where?” he demanded, j bdside | himself. | Her mute lips. only tightened. | “Ver’ well, by God!” he cried, “1j | go make me some fire. You like it, eh? We shall put one toe in the fire until it burn off. Yes? Eh? How you like it? Eh?” The girl’s trembling hands con- tinued busy with her clothing. “So!” he said, hoarsely, “you re- main dumb! Well, then, in ten min-| utes you shall talk!” He walked toward her, pushed her savagely. aside, and strode on into! the spruce thicket. The instant he disappeared. Eve caught up the knife he had dropped, | knelt, down on the blanket and fell] to cutting it into strips. | The hunting knife was like aj yazor; the feverish business was ac- complished in a few ‘moments, the| pieces knotted, the cord strained in ‘a desperate test over her knee. | And now she ran to the precipice} where, ten feet below, the top of a great pine protruded from the gulf. | On the edge of the abyss was a j'spruce root, It looked dead, wedged | deep between two rocks; but with ‘all: her strength she could not pull | it out. | Sobbing, breathless, she tied her | blanket rope to this, threw the other | lend over the cliff’s edge, and, not! ' giving herself time to think, lay flat. i grasped the knotted line, swung off. | Knot by knot she went down. | Half-way her naked feet brushed the ‘needles. She looked over her shoul-) ‘der, behind and down. Then; teeth | clenched) she lowered herself stead-} ‘ily.as she had learned to do in the i school gymnasium, down, down, un- ‘til her legs came astride of a pine limb, * 3 It bent, swayed, gave with her, | letting her sag to a larger limb be- j low, This she clasped, letting go, her | toward him among the tamaracks,| |her naked fect splashing through | pool and mire and sphagnum. t “Good heavens!” he exclaimed as | she flung herself against his stirrup, | sobbing, hysterical, and clinging to j his knee. “Take me back,” she stammered, | “take me back to daddy! I can’t-- | go on—another step—” ‘ | |” He leaned down, swung her up to! ‘his saddle ‘in front, holding her jeradled in his arms. | “Lie still,” he said coolly; “you're lll right now.” . For another second he sat look- ling down at her, at the disheveled hair, the gasping mouth—at the rags | clothing her, and at the flat packet ' clasped convulsively to her. breast. | Then he spoke in alow voice to i-his horse, guiding left with one knee. (Continued in Our Next Issue) -. jose ees | ADVENTURE OF | || THE TWINS. | | By Olive Barton Roberts Nancy and Nick got into pecks of | trouble on their way to the Fairy | Queen’s. Palace in the ‘magic’ auto- |mobile*but they always got out | again. bal and when the Sour Old Witch | across the road in front of them Mike Mole and a thousand of’ his helpers became active at once. They dug and dug and dug until they had tunnels running lercss and cross-criss in every direc- ion right under the wall, and in a jiffy the whole thing tumbled down | quite\flat, leaving space between | the fallen stones for the little car to slide through. Of course Nancy had to charm like this: “Magic auto, hurry fast, And we'll reach Fairyland last.” And Nick had to turn the knob on the whirligig between the jigama- crank and the tingumabob. But | that was all, The little car began to move, and scooted right through the gap like; ‘a shiny red bug scurrying toward lits hiding hole, Light Fingers, the bad little fairy, who had really caused) the trouble, was up in a juniper-tree laughing and laughing and laughing—laugh~ ing because the wall had stopped the Twins. He Was holding his side and was so busy laughing he ever noticed the wall fall down) nd the magic automobile roll away. Suddenly he stopped and started so hard his eyes nearly dropped out ! lof his head. | “Wh-wh-what’s happened?” he | igasped. He was so astonished he fell plumb out of the tree and land- | say a at jed on his head. i “Oh, oh, oh! I'll never get that | old automobile,” he ‘howled loudly, | “What’s that?” asked a sharp | voice. “Who said you wouldn't,” | | Light Fingers turned and saw the | Sour Old Witch beside him. 46 OF DEALER'S 47 SALES THIS YEAR ARE CLOSED CARS As an instance of the tremendous- | b ical ly fast increasing popularity of} 2% 7 Musical. closed cars the country over, the N. R, Rench Motor Sales Co., Hud- son-Essex dealers at Piqua, Ohio, re- port that of the 47 new ears they ad sold this year up to September 15, all but one‘of them were closed cars, Forty-three of them were the rapidly selling. Hudson and Essex Coaches, and three the Super-Six Sedan. As an answer to those who believe | that the saturation point for auto- mobiles in this country is at hand, Mr. Rench announces/that only 10! trade-ins were ‘involved in the 47 new car sales. Tadpole treated with turn into matured frogs at once. thyroxin almost Y 17 Million Jars’ Used Yeark caused a high wall to appear right; - criss- |" WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1922 You can’t get on your feet again by sitting around. : When a girl who takes dictation marries her boss she becomes bos; and he takes dictation. We can’t decide if Will Hayes is the Will of the people or the Will of the movie makers, “Gaston Sought’—headline. After you, my dear Gaston. After everybody gets well edn- cated there will be nobody left to do our work for us, You never can undeistand women. One has had a man arrested for cruelty to a rat. A Boston undertaker has been convicted of selling poison booze and we can. prove it. New Orleans Italian issues a spa- ghetti eating challenge. Where is that New Orleans man who ate 60 pounds of crawfish. Thing; are getting brighter. Even the leaves are turning. A yark is the only song bird that sings as it flies. Others, and humans, sing and then fly. Rershing will write his book on prone : Buzzards Bay Isand, but we like An hour later, Trooper Stormont} ,. ’ jof the State Constabulary, sat his him! and/refuse to ¢omment, | horse in amazement to see a ragged, if breathless, boyish figure speeding}, Some towns are lucky. Two St. Louis insurance men are missing. Porto Rican girl, wants $100,000 because a man hugged her a million times. Dime per, hug, wholesale. Chicago, bandits robbed a poker game and the winners lost heavily. Campaign against needles acci- dents has been started. Have you ever seen a needed accident? In spite of Parisian longer skirts lots of flappers still get their styles from Scotland. About 1,000 bales of cotton skirts burned in Drew, Miss., and so the bol). weevils are mad. Be careful about raising money. A Texas man got 10 years for rais- ing dollar bills to 10 spots. Canadian hen laid an egg every day for 107 days; but then, all Ca- nadians work harder. When a man tells a girl why his wife doesnt understand him it usu- aly is because his wife doea Due to the coal shortage, one ;poular winter resort will be two suits of underwear. MANDAN NEWS SCHANTZ-LORAN. Miss Rose Schantz, daughter of Mrs, Kasper Schantz, and Nick Lor- an, "son of Mr. and Mrs. Thos, Loran, both of this city, were united in marriage yesterday morning at the St. Josephs church at 9 o'clock by Rev. Fr. Clement Dimpfl. They were attended by Miss Rose Loran, sister of the groom, and George Schantz, brother of the bride. Others at the ceremony were relatives and inti- mate friends of the couple. Follow- ing the ‘ceremony the wedding party attendedi a- dinner at the home of the groom’s parents. Mr. and Mn, Loran will continue to make their home in the city at the Loran , residence, Sixth Ave. Southwest. Three transients were arrested al ° Dickinson yesterday morning by Chief of Police W. L. Nichols charg- ed with the theft of an overcoat from the car of Earle Tostevin, which had been parked for a short time on Main street. The theft was immedi- ately reported to the police who wired to various points with the re- ;-sult that the coat was recovered in Dickinson yesterday. Theft of an automobile key from the Lewis Ly- man Dodge car parked outside of the Perfection Bakery was also reported. Misses Mabel, Wolff and Flora Schrink, nurses at the Deaconess hospital received their diplomas yes- terday evening upon the completion of their three-year cvourse of train- ing. An auto ride and luncheon for the young women was given at thi home of Rev. and Mrs. H, Styles Har- ,Tiss of Bismarck. This was followed The bi-monthly dinner’and meet- ing of the Mandan Town Criers club will be held at the private dining room of the Lewis and Clark hotel at 6:30 o'clock: this evening. Ar- rangements for the meeting Oct. 30 wen R. T, Porte of Salt Lake City, ead of te Franklin Price List’ com- pany and the newspaper editors of the Mjasouri Slope district will be guests'of the Town Criers of this city at a booster banquet, and Hal- lowe’en party. A baby girl was born to Principal and Mus. Joseph Bergheim Sunday: | evening. Olaf Olson of Los Angeles, Cal., is | a guest at the home of Mrs. Emma McCadam. Mr: Olson is a brother of the late Chris Olson, Oscar Olson, Mrs. Charles Rowe and Mrs. Albert Larson of ‘the city. He is 80 years old, The United States produces only 0.43 per cent of the world’s fuel , briquets. C7 a ' a a tie ¥ Na ‘ “ ! ‘ { i ¢ ae